Sega Master System

From Video Game Music Preservation Foundation Wiki
Revision as of 15:45, 17 August 2016 by TheAlmightyGuru (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search
Platform - SMS.png
Master System
Sega Master System - 1.png
Released: 1985-10-??
Discontinued: 1993-12-??
Developer: Sega
Type: Hardware

The Sega Master System or Mark III is an 8-bit third-generation videogame console released in 1985 in Japan, 1986 in the US, and 1987 in Europe. The Master System was Sega's competitor to the Nintendo Entertainment System. The Master System used cartridges that were common at the time, but games could also be stored on smaller cards. The Master System featured more sophisticated graphic, but the sound output was lacking. Later, the Game Gear was released, which was essentially a portable Master System that competed with Nintendo's Game Boy. Sega's mascot, Sonic the Hedgehog, made his debut on the Master System.

Games

Models

Mark III

The original Japanese console. Sega created a floppy disk drive for the Mark III but it was never released.

Master System

The American and European platform featured a new name and a redesigned case.

Master System Plus

A standard Sega Master System but with a built-in game.

Master System II

A shorter Sega Master System, which was the equivalent to the top-loader NES, except it was only released in Europe.

Music and Sound

Sega had licensed the Texas Instruments SN76489 chip and included it inside the VDP (Video Display Processor) Custom Chip of the Master System. Depending on the version the physical chip is either called 315-5124 (SMS1) or 315-5246 (SMS2). Aside from Graphics, the chip can output three pulse wave channels and a noise channel. Features include volume control for each channel as well as an Envelope Generator for each instrument.

The Japanese Model of the Master System also had an additional Yamaha YM2413 FM Synthesis chip that can work in 2 different modes. In the first it can play up six FM channels as well as five channels with predefined percussion instruments, and in the second mode it can play nine FM channels but no percussion.

This sound hardware can also be found in several other Sega Systems like the Game Gear which also uses the VDP, although modified to offer stereo sound, or the Mark III, which had a YM2413 based FM Sound Unit available as add-on hardware.

Technical

The Master System's sound chip can go from frequency $3FF to $00.

Links